I found this month's read in the pocket of an airliner ...
and started reading it today. No, that's not true, but I did reserve a copy at the library via my lap top and picked it up yesterday. I've read the first three chapters or so, and I have to say I'm enjoying it immensly.
About the title, how many believe the title is from the adage that counting sheep, usually sheep jumping in single file over a fence, acts as a somniferous aid. When a child, watching the cartoon at the movies, the counting of sheep jumping a fence by bugs bunny or porky pig or some other character trying to get to sleep was omniscient. But then, since the protaginist, Rick, has an electric sheep for a pet, so we know they exist, does the title have another meaning? The author, Dick, being born in 1928, would have been familiar with the counting of sheep in trying to get to sleep from the many cartoons he probably saw. But then why isn't the book named Do Androids Count Electric Sheep?
You have to be alert to catch the allusions in the novel. When Rick is calling the pet shop to inquire about the ostrich they have in their window, he gives his name to the pet shop salesman as Frank Merriwell. If you don't understand this allusion, be sure to look it up on Wikipedia. Frank Merriwell of Yale was aired on Saturday morning in the forties. Dick would have been exposed to Merriwell through the radio, newspaper cartoons, and the Frank Merriwell Big Little Books. How many of you know what a Big Little Book was? There's a picture of one on Wikipedia. Be alert as you read.
I dated a girl once who ....
had a false pet. It was a stuffed terrier which looked realistic. She called it Nonesuch, but I don't think it ever came to her when she called it. The moral of this story? Don't date any girls who are weirder than you are.